Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 245, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 October 1915 — Page 3
Coi>„ r'_~ ■ **ucr ftMarx * / Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes Are the ( Choice of Men of Fashion Every where You Go The man who wears these famous clothes is well dressed, not only in his own estimation but in the opinion of everybody else, whether he walks down Fifth Avenue in New York, or down the main street of any small town, anywhere. _■ - • # A /' “ ' * ' T * Right style is the same wherever you go; and if you’re wearing these clothes VARSITY FIFTY FIVE VARSITY SIX HUNDRED The stylish suit The stylish overcoat you know you're right. We are making it possible for the men of our own community to be surfe on this point, by having a complete and varied stock Young men’s styles, especially the Varsity models in suits and overcoats are particularly for young men; but lots of older men, young in spirit—men who feel young—like to look young in their clothes. We take care of all of you; and we have sizes to fit all of you—stout men, tall slender men, short stout men—the right sizes for all. Special values in suits and overcoats here at S2O and $25. You’ll think it’s the right price to pay when you see the clothes we sell. - The G. E. Murray Company The Home of Haft Schaffner & Marx clothes
HANGING GROVE.
Mrs. J. R. Phillips went to Rensselaer Thursday.' Mr. and Mrs. Will Zard left Thursday for Mitchell, S. Dak., for a two weeks’ visit with relatives. Mrs. W. A. Stephens went to Mont-' gomery county Wednesday to visit relatives for a few days. There are still several silos to fill, and the com is getting very dry. There is quite a demand for extra help to fill silos just now. Lon Wood shelled com Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday hauled the grain to the McCoysburg elevator with about 20 teams. The elevator was a very busy place for a few hours. Marion Crowder will shell Friday or as soon as the roads dry up enough to permit hauling. W. C. Moneyhun expects to have eight or ten more teams at work hauling rock next week and' rush the road to completion with the next few weeks. Weather conditions have been very adverse toward road building as well as other work, and progress have been very slow.
From fifteen to fifty Brazil nuts grow in one~seed vessel, which is as big as a man's head. The descendants of a single pair of rabbits would in four years amount to more than 1,250,000. Yachts have been made wholly of aluminum. - - Tokio Ims more than 800 public Hnfhw and more than 300,000 natives bathe daily at a cost of about 2 cents farit j
NEWLAND.
The big plows began work Tuesday. C. A. Harvey was otit from Chicago Monday. - Clifford Spate was out from Rensselaer Monday. Miss FyTtle Faber returned from Frankfort Sunday. J. W. Spate returned from Belvidere, 111., Wednesday. Charles Head spent the week end visiting friends at Newland. James Mullady returned from a business trip to Lafayette Tuesday. Mr. Selissinger, of Gary, spent the week end at Newland. He announces the> arrival of a daughter in his home. John Laly was out (rom Gary Monday and Tuesday. He declares that he will return and raise onions next spring. Mrs. S. L. Jordan and daughter, Miss Nellie, returned from Fort Recovery, Ohio, Saturday. Miss Jordan left for Aurora, HI., Sunday.
Have you ever used' White Star flour ? if not you certainly have made a mistake. We guarantee it to please you in every detail or your money cheerfully refunded. $1.55 per sack. ROWLES & PARKER. Nineteen sixteen Model Maxwell touring ear 9655; self-starter and all modem; at the Main Garage. Call and see it. Phone Two-Seven-Three for coal, wood and feed. _ -
THB EVENING REPUBLICAN, REN3SBLAEB, IWB.
FAIR OAKS.
Miss Ellen Reed, of Vifgie, is staying with Mrs. Erwin.. Bom, Oct. 13, a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Haste. Bom, Oct. 13th, to Bryan Britchett and wife, a daughter. Roy Gundy came from Gary Saturday to Visit home folks. Mrs. Davis Winslow is having her house painted and repaired. Rev. Postill will preach here Sunday evening at 7:30. AH invited. Mr. and Mrs. Higgins, of Mitchell, S. Dak., are visiting F. R. Erwinls. Mrs. J. M. Allen, who has been very sick for the past two weeks, is able to be up some. Mrs. Lee Maxwell came from Michigan last week to visit her mother, Mrs. John Gilmore. Miss Pansie Bozelle returned the first of the week from Mt. Ayr, where she had been for some time. Mrs. Allen Eight went to the dredge boat at Kersey to stay with her husband, who is working there. Mrs. J. M. Clifton was called to Rensselaer this week on account of the serious illness of her mother. Married, Oct. 7th, in Minneapolis, Minn., Willard Wrice, of Fair Oaks, and Miss Josephine Gutting, of Lisbon, N. Dak. Mrs. Cottingham went to Momence this week and took Mrs. Wm. Cottingham to a specialist to have her eyes treated.
. A highway of the Andes mountains attains an elevation of 17,000 feet.
DEMONSTRATION OF A WOMAN’S GRIT
Twice Her New Bara Was Destroyed By Fire Duimg Dinner, But She Will Build Another (hie. Logansport, Ind., Oct. 13. —The grit of a mere woman was clearly demonstrated in the misfortunes that befell Mrs. Angelina Swoverland, a self-sustaining Hoosier who runs a farm southeast of this city, which culminated today in a fire that destroyed her newly constructed bam, entailing a loss of $2,000. Several months ago this woman built a new bam and on its completion gave a dinner to the workers. The kitchen stove became overheated and set fire to the old homestead, completely destroying the structure. She then set the carpenters and other workmen at work building a new house. Today upon its completion she gave another dinner. This time it was in the bam. The fire from the stove set fire to the bam, which was burned to the ground. “I’ll build another bam and HI give another dinner, too,” said Mrs. Swoverland, “but it will be in a boat in the middle of the river.”
LYCEUM COURSE DATES.
November s—Colonial Band. January 19—Ralph Bingham. January 28—Tahan. February 15—William Rainey Bennett. * March 29—Columbian Entertainers.
Stlbeerifce for The Republican.
STRIKE BREAKER SHOOTS TWO MEN
Night Watchman Wounded In Hand and Citizen Hit In Chest—Neither Dangerously Hurt. Fort Wayne, Ind., Oct. 13.—Perry Frobright, who says his home is at Indianapolis and who has been working as a strike breaker during the street car trouble here, tonight shot A. C. Caldwell, of Logansport, a night watchman employed by the traction company in guarding the building in which the strike breakers are lodged, through the hand, and shot A. McKee, a citizen through the chest. Neither victim is considered dangerously wounded although both are in a hospital. McKee passed the building where the strike breakers are housed shortly after midnight and became involved in a quarrel with Frobright. Caldwell interfered and Frobright fired twice, both bullets finding a mark . He is held by the police on a charge of shooting to kill. y
Stoves Put Up and Blakened.
Don’t worry about your heating s ove. We will put it up, blacken it and shine the nickle parts. Ja. today.—F. W. Ci-iSfc . i HARDY PLANTS.
I have just received a supply of fi .e hardy plants, including Canter bury Belles and Hardy Phlox; they a: e very fine and flower-lovers should see them.—J. H. Holden. * “We Print Anything for Anybody.”
Appeals to Women of England To Wed Maimed War Heroes.
London, Oct. 13.—4:53 p. m.—The Rev. Ernest Houghton, a Bristol rector, has started an appeal to patriotic women of the nation to give their lives to ameliorate the condition of maimed -heroes of the war by marrying them. The rector contends that the exampel of France shows that unions thus arranged promise i greater happiness than is customary from the Methods in England. Strict secrecy is promised as to the identity of women prepared to immolate themselves after the plan of the league until the arrangements for their marriage are complete.
Suggests Plan For Profitable Drinking—Make Wife Bartender.
Monticello Journal. For the married man who cannot get along without drinks, the following is suggested as a means of freedom from bondage to saloons: Start a saloon in your own home. Be the only customer (you’ll have no license to pay). Go to your wife and give her two dollars to buy a gallon of whisky, and remember there axe sixty-nine drinks in ‘a gallon. Buy your drinks from no one but your wife, and by the time that the first gallon is gone she will have eight dollars to put into the bank and two dollars to start business again.
Eight olive trees on the Mount of Olives, Jerusalem, are known, to be more than 800 years old. Subscribe for The Republican. •1
